Soldato
On-off cycles are what kills electronics it seems, rather than continuous use .Funny thing is I've seen more psus have capacitor problems when sat for years rather than be in use.
On-off cycles are what kills electronics it seems, rather than continuous use .Funny thing is I've seen more psus have capacitor problems when sat for years rather than be in use.
That one the reasons why i want to buy a new PSU..Only just replaced my Corsair TX750, because I wanted a zero rpm mode.
I added a water loop and wanted silence at idle. The PSU was really loud in comparison, albeit not loud overall.That one the reasons why i want to buy a new PSU..
Even if it not that then i guess with most PSU warranties being around 7 to 10 years it not going be that bad to fork out for a new PSU just once every 7 to 10 years
I bought my PSU in Jan 2011
I just replaced the 140mm fan in my PSU a few days ago
(I don't think the fan in it was even working anymore as there been no dust at all on the PSU fan filter for a few years)
More or less frequent light use does good to capacitors by helping to maintain aluminium oxide layer at top shape.On-off cycles are what kills electronics it seems, rather than continuous use .
Increase of ESR or drying up don't show externally so looking OK is no guarantee of fully working capacitors.I'd still use it if it all looks good. Perhaps for piece of mind have a visual check at the capacitors to check they are not leaking (they won't be). For goodness sake do not give yourself a shock though, as a PSU can hold charge for many months since being last used.